2021
DOI: 10.1186/s40359-021-00549-y
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Perceived stress in the time of COVID-19: the association with brooding and COVID-related rumination in adults with and without migraine

Abstract: Background The main goal of this research was to explore whether migraineurs had a higher level of perceived stress than healthy controls during the times of the coronavirus and related restrictive measures, and to examine the relationship between different subtypes of rumination and perceived stress in these groups. We measured two facets of depressive rumination, brooding and reflection, along with rumination about the current COVID-19 situation to see whether these different subtypes of rumi… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…In a 90-day prospective daily-diary cohort study involving adults with episodic migraine, increased levels of stress were associated with the risk of migraine the next day [ 24 ]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, perceived stress was more strongly associated with brooding and COVID-related rumination among patients with migraine than healthy controls [ 25 ]. Also, perceived stress has been found to be associated with chronic migraine, depression and anxiety [ 26 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a 90-day prospective daily-diary cohort study involving adults with episodic migraine, increased levels of stress were associated with the risk of migraine the next day [ 24 ]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, perceived stress was more strongly associated with brooding and COVID-related rumination among patients with migraine than healthy controls [ 25 ]. Also, perceived stress has been found to be associated with chronic migraine, depression and anxiety [ 26 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chinese patients with migraine also reported increased levels of insomnia, anxiety, and depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic ( 32 ). Perceived stress was more strongly associated with brooding and COVID-related rumination among patients with migraine than healthy controls ( 33 ). Perceived stress is known to be more common in chronic migraine, depression, and anxiety ( 34 ) and it might have been one of the risk factors that contributed to the worsening of migraine during the pandemic.…”
Section: Subsection 3: Long-term Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Frequency of migraine came back to its basal condition, and even worsened in episodic patients, with a potential transformation into chronic form ( 26 ). Thus, the long-lasting effects of the pandemic were found to have a negative impact on migraine evolution ( 33 ).…”
Section: Subsection 3: Long-term Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We had no hypothesis regarding changes in SOC in the total sample, as we did not expect COVID-19 to be perceived as equally stressful among all respondents [43], that is, changes of SOC were expected to vary depending on individual levels of stressor exposure. Therefore, our analyses included COVID-19-related rumination as indicator of subjective stressor severity [44]. Building on previous research [45] and first studies during the pandemic [46], we assumed that ruminative thoughts occur when stressors are perceived as unsolvable and overpowering, and that the occurrence of rumination is predictive of psychopathological symptoms [47].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%